Commitment of Traders (COT) – Overview
A practical guide to reading positioning in futures markets.
1. What is the COT Report?
The Commitment of Traders (COT) is a weekly publication by the CFTC (U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission). It shows how major trader groups are positioned in futures (and options on futures). Each report reflects positions as of the close on Tuesday and is published every Friday.
Release time: Fridays at 3:30 PM ET (usually 21:30 CET/CEST). U.S. holidays can shift the release schedule.
2. Trader Groups
- Commercials (Hedgers) – Producers, merchants, processors, and end users of the underlying commodity. They hedge real-world exposure and are typically net short in many markets. When they move toward a net long, it can indicate potential upside.
- Non-Commercials (Large Speculators) – Hedge funds, CTAs, and financial institutions trading for profit. They often amplify trends. Extreme long or short readings can precede reversals.
- Non-Reportables – Small traders not required to report. Often viewed as a contrarian signal.
3. Report Structure
The COT report shows long, short, and spreading positions for each group. There are multiple report formats, including the classic “Legacy”, the more detailed “Disaggregated”, and the “Traders in Financial Futures (TFF)” for index and FX markets.
4. Key Metrics
- Net Positions = Long − Short
- Open Interest = Total outstanding contracts
- COT Index (0–100): Position relative to its own historical range
5. How to Use COT Data
The COT report is not an intraday trading tool – it’s best used to define bias or market regime. When commercials reach extreme long positions while speculators are heavily short, it can suggest a potential bottoming process.
Many traders combine COT signals with seasonality and fundamental data (e.g., WASDE reports, export data, or weather models) to confirm directional bias.
6. Typical Setups
- Commercial Extreme + Seasonality – Buy setup when commercials are net long and the market enters a bullish seasonal phase.
- Speculator Overstretch – Fade extreme speculative positioning when price momentum stalls.
- Trend Confirmation – Use COT data as a background filter for trend-following systems.
7. Limitations
- The data lags by three days (Tuesday → Friday).
- Use consistent data (Futures-Only or Futures + Options).
- Do not rely on single-week readings – context and multi-week trends matter.
8. Conclusion
The COT report provides an invaluable macro view of how key participants position themselves across commodities, indices, and currencies. Used correctly, it helps traders identify accumulation and distribution phases, filter seasonal trades, and align strategies with professional money flows.